Anti-Trump Texas faithless elector Stephen Christopher “Chris” Suprun, who wrote a widely-shared op-ed in The New York Times about his decision, joined and paid for cheating website Ashley Madison in 2012, using the same address registered to his 9/11 charity, while bankrupt, likely unemployed, and married with three young kids, after he and his working wife owed over $200,000 to multiple creditors — and that’s just the start of it.

GotNews’ research into Suprun’s bizarre and unexplained flip-flop against President-elect Donald J. Trump turned up Ashley Madison data, damning bankruptcy records, and a series of P.O. boxes and what appears to be an association with a payday loan scam site.

There’s a lot to go through today, folks, but it’s good. So bear with us and keep reading:

Even though he used a throw-away e-mail address and changed his birth date by a few days, the Ashley Madison credit card data is unmistakably Suprun:

There’s only one Stephen Christopher Suprun, from Texas, born in March 1974, and the P.O. box is one of many P.O. boxes registered to Stephen Christopher Suprun that can be found with a quick search of any public records database.

All of which raises the question: is this even a real charity? But back to Suprun’s cheating:

According to the data, Suprun joined Ashley Madison in February 2012, just six months after joint-filing for bankruptcy with his wife, Dianne Michelle Suprun, in September 2011, and paid for an “affair guarantee” in September 2012.

An “affair guarantee”, which costs $249 today, is a discounted “package” for “credits” that allow men to chat with potential cheating partners on the website. Suprun, who had three kids under the age of 10 at the time, listed himself on the site as “attached male seeking female.”

Public records also show that Stephen “Chris” Suprun registered 6 different P.O. boxes in 6 cities in Texas and Virginia. Why does one person need so many P.O. boxes? At least one of the P.O. boxes was used for Suprun’s fishy 9/11 foundation — the same P.O. box he also used to pay for his Ashley Madison “affair guarantee.”

What was he using those other P.O. boxes for?

And it gets even fishier:

Leading public records database Nexis lists one of Chris Suprun’s websites as “one-hour-advance.com”:

That website appears to be a payday loan scam site that became defunct sometime between March 2016 and today, according to Archive.org. Take a look:

Searching WhoIs history of the website and any related websites always ends in a dead end — the owner of the site used domain privacy services to conceal their identity. The addresses buried in the site’s privacy policy and terms of use? P.O. boxes in Chicago or Miami. Phone numbers are toll free, or use a Los Angeles, California area code.

Could this really be Stephen “Chris” Suprun’s website and, presumably, source of income? Or did Suprun use the site at one point because of his unemployment and bankruptcy? Is he a victim of a payday loan scam site? But why would someone who owns websites like “neverforget911.org” and “consurgo.org” ever list a payday loan site they used as their own website?

In fact, between the well-heeled PR firm, the Democratic elite’s unhinged response to President-elect Donald J. Trump’s resounding victory on November 8, and Suprun’s sudden change of heart about Trump, it even raises the question of whether or not Suprun is receiving money, favors, or other kinds of benefits in exchange for his anti-Trump cooperation!

Chris Suprun grandstands in The New York Times about his experience on 9/11, his “debt” to his children, and how he is an “elector of conscience.”

He doesn’t mention that he paid money to cheat on his working wife, while bankrupt and deep in debt with his 3 kids, using the same P.O. box that he used for his 9/11 charity — one of many P.O. boxes registered at one point to him in public records databases, along with what appears to be a fishy payday loan scam site.

Suprun implies he is an “elector of conscience”, but GotNews’ research into his past casts doubt on the idea that he has a conscience at all.

GotNews sent requests for comment on the shocking information in this article to multiple e-mail addresses listed as Suprun’s, as well as Suprun’s social justice PR firm Megaphone Strategies, that he lists in his Twitter profile. GotNews has received no responses as of press time.

GotNews also called Suprun’s Never Forget Foundation and tried to send an e-mail through the Never Forget Foundation contact form. We got no response over the phone and left a message. The e-mail contact form did not go through.

Stay tuned for more.

UPDATE 12/13/2016: A reader familiar with the Nexis database listing process tells GotNews that the “one-hour-advance.com” website is the source of Suprun’s e-mail, making him almost definitively a user of what appears to be that payday loan scam site, rather than the owner. This fits with Suprun’s profile as a man seeking relief from severe financial troubles.